it has become uncertain whether an indicative or an subjunctive was
intended. Later, this is going to promote the loss of a distinctive subjunc-
tive in a great many instances.
In the chapters on morphology I indicated that there were distinctive
forms for the imperative singular and plural, and these are, I think self-
explanatory.
In addition, however, there is a special imperative form for
the 1st person plural, namely
uton, which is very similar to present-day
English
let’s in its use, as can be seen from an example such as:
(68) Utan faran to Bethleem
let’s travel to Bethlehem
For
third person exhortations, the subjunctive is used, as can also happen
today, as the gloss to (67), discussed above, shows. With a small number
of verbs roughly equivalent to the modal verbs in present-day English,
the infinitive can
directly follow, as in:
(69) Hwæt sc
.
eal ic
.
singan?
what must I sing?
A use of the infinitive which has been quite lost from English is its use
with verbs of rest or motion, as in:
(70) He¯ e¯ode eft sittan si
ee
an mid his
e
egnum
He went again [to] sit then with his disciples
So far I have completely ignored one
morphological form of the
infinitive. You may also have wondered about the Old English corre-
spondent to the familiar
to-infinitive of present-day English. The two
points are connected. As well as the usual infinitive forms we have
observed, there was a further infinitive form, so that we find forms such
as
fremmenne or
fremmanne and
lufienne or
lufianne, corresponding to the
plain infinitives
fremman,
lufian. These
are traditionally called inflected
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